Superwomen: Gender, Power, and Representation
Autor Professor Carolyn Coccaen Limba Engleză Paperback – 7 sep 2016
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781501316579
ISBN-10: 1501316575
Pagini: 288
Ilustrații: 28 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1501316575
Pagini: 288
Ilustrații: 28 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
Focuses on the ways in which cultural narratives of gender are negotiated through transmedia female superheroes, by writers, artists, editors, parent companies, and audiences of competing constituencies
Notă biografică
Carolyn Cocca is Professor in the Department of Politics, Economics, and Law at the State University of New York, College at Old Westbury, USA. She is the author of Jailbait: The Politics of Statutory Rape Laws in the United States, and various articles and book chapters about gender and superheroes.
Cuprins
AcknowledgmentsList of IllustrationsIntroduction: Representation MattersChapter 1: "The Sexier the Outfit, the Fewer Questions Asked": Wonder WomanChapter 2: "When You Go Out At Night, You Won't Be Alone": Batgirl(s) and Birds of PreyChapter 3: "Somebody Has To Save Our Skins!" Padmé Amidala, Leia Organa, and Jaina Solo in Star WarsChapter 4: "No Such Things as Limits": The X-WomenChapter 5: "Slayers. Every One of Us": Buffy the Vampire SlayerChapter 6: "Part of Something Bigger": Ms. Marvel(s) and Captain Marvel(s)Conclusion: Superwomen, Diversity, and RepresentationBibliographyIndex
Recenzii
Superwomen is an accessible text that can be enjoyed by both lay and expert readers. It succinctly summarizes the history and issues surrounding some of the most well-known female superheroes while having a robust bibliography and enough theoretical depth to satisfy any popular culture scholar.
Insightful, sometimes depressing or infuriating, always engaging, Superwomen is an excellent addition to the world of superhero criticism.
[A] thoughtful and timely book.
It most certainly fills a void as far as research concerning superwomen is concerned, both updating existing canon where characters such as Wonder Woman and Buffy are already extensively covered, but also providing insight with regards characters and texts which haven't been as widely explored such as Captain and Ms Marvel, or Batgirl. I'm certain that Superwomen will inspire future research and spark lots of brilliant discussions- there are plenty of fascinating superwomen in comics, films, cartoons to be explored.
Brava, Carolyn Cocca! In Superwomen, she delivers a comprehensive (and fascinating) overview of comics and pop culture women heroes, from Wonder Woman and the women of X-Men to Buffy and Princess Leia. Brava again for detailing the worst and the best treatment these characters have received in the hands of writers, artists, and film studios. And a final brava for showing how today, fans' reaction and feedback has influenced the positive representation of their beloved women heroes.
One of the greatest strengths of this work is its nesting of the portrayal of superwomen in multiple contexts to explore how and why female superheroes are portrayed. Not content with textual analysis, Cocca explores the ideology of creators, fan reception, the effect of the movement from one medium to another on the portrayal of characters, and most significantly how the changing methods of distribution have affected who are the readers of these books, how the industry has perceived those readers, and how this has influenced the portrayal of female superheroes. .This is a very important book for comic and gender studies. It will take its place beside the work of Trina Robbins and Lilian Robinson as canonical analyses of female superheroes, and will, no doubt, be the text against which future gender and superhero studies are measured.
Carolyn Cocca's timely new book uses social theory to make sense of superwomen like Wonder Woman, Batgirl, Ms. Marvel, and Buffy the Vampire Slayer. The result is an insightful study that combines close readings of specific texts with a nuanced account of comics as both business and fan culture. Anyone with an interest in feminism and comics will want to know about this book.
This is the book pop culture scholarship needs now. The genre of the hyper-masculine, straight, white superhero has evolved radically since Wonder Woman first challenged it in the 1940s, and Carolyn Cocca has amassed a definitive history through the high-powered lens of intersectional feminism. Drawing from comics, television, and film, Superwomen spotlights a cast of the most influential female superheroes of the 20th and 21st centuries, revealing the power of female bodies to shape and shift cultural attitudes. Batgirl and Buffy, Princess Diana and Princess Leia, the evolutionary women of X-Men and the evolving identities of Marvel Girl, Ms. Marvel, and Captain Marvel: they all are evidence of Cocca's persuasive argument for how greatly diversity matters.
Superwomen highlights the inevitable limitations of a world in which white cishet able-bodied male creators predominate, regardless of what may be a wealth of good intention.
The author's voice is strong... creating an enjoyable read as well as an informative one. I was truly impressed by the amount of research done for each section. .the content is quality information that needs to be heard, read, shared, and used by everyone.
Cocca's book is particularly effective due to the thoroughness of her data collection and the comprehensiveness of her analysis.
Insightful, sometimes depressing or infuriating, always engaging, Superwomen is an excellent addition to the world of superhero criticism.
[A] thoughtful and timely book.
It most certainly fills a void as far as research concerning superwomen is concerned, both updating existing canon where characters such as Wonder Woman and Buffy are already extensively covered, but also providing insight with regards characters and texts which haven't been as widely explored such as Captain and Ms Marvel, or Batgirl. I'm certain that Superwomen will inspire future research and spark lots of brilliant discussions- there are plenty of fascinating superwomen in comics, films, cartoons to be explored.
Brava, Carolyn Cocca! In Superwomen, she delivers a comprehensive (and fascinating) overview of comics and pop culture women heroes, from Wonder Woman and the women of X-Men to Buffy and Princess Leia. Brava again for detailing the worst and the best treatment these characters have received in the hands of writers, artists, and film studios. And a final brava for showing how today, fans' reaction and feedback has influenced the positive representation of their beloved women heroes.
One of the greatest strengths of this work is its nesting of the portrayal of superwomen in multiple contexts to explore how and why female superheroes are portrayed. Not content with textual analysis, Cocca explores the ideology of creators, fan reception, the effect of the movement from one medium to another on the portrayal of characters, and most significantly how the changing methods of distribution have affected who are the readers of these books, how the industry has perceived those readers, and how this has influenced the portrayal of female superheroes. .This is a very important book for comic and gender studies. It will take its place beside the work of Trina Robbins and Lilian Robinson as canonical analyses of female superheroes, and will, no doubt, be the text against which future gender and superhero studies are measured.
Carolyn Cocca's timely new book uses social theory to make sense of superwomen like Wonder Woman, Batgirl, Ms. Marvel, and Buffy the Vampire Slayer. The result is an insightful study that combines close readings of specific texts with a nuanced account of comics as both business and fan culture. Anyone with an interest in feminism and comics will want to know about this book.
This is the book pop culture scholarship needs now. The genre of the hyper-masculine, straight, white superhero has evolved radically since Wonder Woman first challenged it in the 1940s, and Carolyn Cocca has amassed a definitive history through the high-powered lens of intersectional feminism. Drawing from comics, television, and film, Superwomen spotlights a cast of the most influential female superheroes of the 20th and 21st centuries, revealing the power of female bodies to shape and shift cultural attitudes. Batgirl and Buffy, Princess Diana and Princess Leia, the evolutionary women of X-Men and the evolving identities of Marvel Girl, Ms. Marvel, and Captain Marvel: they all are evidence of Cocca's persuasive argument for how greatly diversity matters.
Superwomen highlights the inevitable limitations of a world in which white cishet able-bodied male creators predominate, regardless of what may be a wealth of good intention.
The author's voice is strong... creating an enjoyable read as well as an informative one. I was truly impressed by the amount of research done for each section. .the content is quality information that needs to be heard, read, shared, and used by everyone.
Cocca's book is particularly effective due to the thoroughness of her data collection and the comprehensiveness of her analysis.